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Sunday 19 January 2014
Pastor Richard Shahancharged in wife's murder was headed to Europe to marry boyfriend, prosecutor says
Pastor charged in wife's murder was headed to Europe to marry boyfriend, prosecutor says
January 16, 2014 at 4:16 PM, updated January 17, 2014 at 3:26 PM
Richard Shahan(Jefferson County Jail)
BIRMINGHAM, Alabama
- Bond for the former Homewood pastor
charged with murder in his wife's stabbing is set at $100,000 after
prosectors said he tried to leave the country to marry his boyfriend.
If Richard Lee Shahan makes
bond, he must remain on house arrest, a judge ruled.
Shahan, 53, appeared for a hearing Thursday
afternoon before Jefferson County District Judge Sheldon Watkins. Shahan is
represented by Wendell Sheffield and John Lentine. Deputy Jefferson County
District Attorneys Laura Poston and Leigh Gwathney are prosecuting the case.
Gwathney
said that information obtained from more than 3,000 of Shahan's emails
indicated that he was planning to leave the country and never return. He
was heading to Kazakhstan via Germany and ultimately planned to move to
the United Kingdom, she said.
"He planned to become a citizen
there and begin a new life with his boyfriend... who he intended to
marry," Gwathney said. "He had no intention of ever returning to the
United States. He had no home to return to and he had said his goodbyes
to his family."
Sheffield and Lentine contested prosecutors'
claims that Shahan was leaving the country for good and questioned
whether the state has "direct evidence" of Shahan's involvement in his
wife's death.
"They are doing everything they can to try to manufacture a murder case," Lentine said. [Click here to see what others are saying about the latest allegations against Shahan.]
Shahan has been held in the Jefferson County Jail without bond
since his Jan. 1 arrest. His attorneys a week ago filed several motions, including
requesting that a judge set bond.
Watkins set Shahan's bond at $100,000, under the conditions that
he must remain on house arrest and submit to electronic monitoring. A preliminary hearing is set for Feb. 5.
Shahan's attorneys requested a bond no higher than $30,000,
while prosecutors adamantly requested that he remain in jail without bond, saying he is a flight risk.
Sheffield and Lentine disputed the representation of Shahan as a
"fugitive from justice," saying he had announced his plans to travel and
conduct mission work months earlier.
"Our client had made plans to go on a mission trip," Sheffield
told the judge. "(Prosecutors) are wanting you to overlook the fact that he had
told everyone of his plans."
"To argue that a person
not told at the time they left that they were going to be arrested is a flight
risk, their evidence doesn't even come close," Lentine said.
Shahan was arrested Jan. 1 at a Nashville airport while trying
to board a plane to Germany, extradited and returned to the custody of
Jefferson County last week.
His attorneys also requested that the possessions that were
seized at the airport be returned to Shahan. Those items included luggage,
$27,000 in U.S. and foreign currency, a phone and various hard drives and thumb
drives.
Sheffield and Lentine specifically sought the return of the
money, saying that it was personal money from his job. They argued that the
state had no legitimate reason to hold the funds unless prosecutors could
present evidence that it was contraband or was related to Karen Shahan's death.
Watkins ruled that the U.S. currency should be returned to
Shahan, but the other money - pounds, euros and Kazakhstani currency - will not
be turned over.
Watkins also agreed to write a motion preserving evidence after
defense attorneys expressed concerns about evidence being misplaced and the
number of agencies involved in the investigation.
Shahan made his initial
court appearance Jan.
9 by video for a 48-hour hearing, during which a judge read the charge against
Shahan and informed him of his right to a preliminary hearing.
Sheffield and Lentine have said that the statements implying
that Shahan was fleeing the country are disingenuous because he had announced
plans for a mission trip months earlier.
In December, several newsletters and prayer cards indicated that
Shahan was planning a
three-year mission trip with Bible Mission International in
Frankfurt.
Shortly after his release, the pastor took
paid administrative leave from his post as Children and
Families Pastor and the Facilities Director at First Baptist, and he resigned Dec.
31.
Exact details as to why Shahan was charged at this point in the investigation
are still limited, but Homewood police confirmed that investigators were able
to establish motive but are not able to elaborate at this point because the
investigation is ongoing.
State says murder suspect planned to wed boyfriend
Prosecutors claimed in court Thursday that Alabama Baptist
minister Richard Shahan was on his way to Europe to marry his boyfriend
when police arrested him in Nashville, Tenn.
By Bob Allen
Prosecutors say a former minister at First Baptist Church in
Birmingham, Ala., charged with his wife’s murder, was trying to leave
the country prior to his Jan. 1 arrest to marry his boyfriend.
The latest twist in a story that has received worldwide media
attention came Jan. 16 in a bond hearing for Richard Shahan, 53, who
resigned recently as children and families pastor and facilities
director at First Baptist, reportedly to head overseas for three years
of mission work in Europe and Central Asia.
Prosecutors
said information gleaned from more than 3,000 of Shahan’s e-mails
indicate he was planning to leave the United States for good, ultimately
moving to the United Kingdom.
"He planned to become a citizen there and begin a new life with his
boyfriend ... who he intended to marry," Deputy Jefferson County
District Attorney Leigh Gwathney said, according to the Birmingham News.
"He had no intention of ever returning to the United States. He had no
home to return to and he had said his goodbyes to his family."
Jefferson County District Judge Sheldon Watkins set bond for Shahan
at $100,000. If he makes bail, he must remain on house arrest and submit
to electronic monitoring. A preliminary hearing is set for Feb. 5.
Shahan is accused of fatally stabbing his wife at the Homewood, Ala.,
home they rented from First Baptist Church in July. Police earlier said
they had established a motive, but it had not been made public before
Thursday’s hearing.
The prosecution’s theory appears similar to the 2010 murder conviction of Matt Baker,
a Baylor University graduate and pastor of several Texas Baptist
churches who was convicted of killing his wife and making it look like a
suicide because he planned to marry his mistress and believed a divorce
would harm his ministry career.
Baker is serving a 65-year prison sentence in a high-profile story
that was featured on ABC’s “20/20” andt inspired a Lifetime movie, “Sins of the Preacher,” which first aired in September and is scheduled for rebroadcast on Feb. 9.
Another detail that emerged at Thursday’s hearing is that Shahan was
carrying $27,000 in U.S. and foreign currency when Homeland Security
officials detained him at the Nashville International Airport attempting
to board a flight to Germany.
The judge ordered return of the U.S. currency but said the other
money — pounds, euros and Kazakhstani currency — could be held as
evidence.
Shahan’s lawyers disputed his representation as a fugitive from
justice, saying he talked openly about his plans to do mission work
overseas for months. They also questioned whether the state has any
“direct evidence” of their client’s involvement in his wife’s death.
"They are doing everything they can to try to manufacture a murder case," Attorney John Lentine said, according to the Birmingham News.